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1-11 of 11
- Sinbad and his shipmates aid a young prince, who must battle an evil wizard to gain the hand of a beautiful princess.
- The Siege of Kut al-Amara in World War 1 in 1916 is an important episode of the war between the superpower (British Empire) and the weakest power (Ottoman Empire). It is an example of the everlasting struggle between the wild face of imperialism and colonialism and the weak right owners who were protected by the shield of unity, and they were able to defeat the most powerful empire of the world at that time, The surrender of approximately 13,000 British-Indian soldiers after 147 days of siege was the worst surrender in the history of the British army, and this battle has been deliberately omitted from their history books, this unexpected victory was a shock to the oppressed who had lost hope of a free life, this film provides an accurate analysis of this battle to be an example for all current generations that only unity and ignoring the sectarian differences can make miracles on the mutiny against injustice.
- Asia, Rayan and Ali find themselves imprisoned in their homeland, Iraq, because of the Western invasion. With their lives shattered and in a country where violence and religious war pose a threat to their health and well-being.
- Documentary exploring the consequences of a possible upcoming attack on Iraq led by the United States. In October 2002, Danmarks Radio's news photographer Niels Andersen and journalist Ole Sippel traveled to Iraq to see if the country is prepared for a devastating attack from American president George W. Bush, and to explore how the Iraq people looks upon their leader and the possible fall of him.
- (Nadia), born in (France), returns to (Iraq) to rediscover her roots. She uncovers her grandfather Haj (Najm) Al-Baqal's role in the 1918 revolution in (Najaf) against British colonialism.
- Two great rivers - the Tigris and the Euphrates - have been the lifeblood of Iraq for centuries. But in the summer of 2018, toxic water in the southern Iraqi city of Basra sparked an explosion of anger and unrest as people across the city fell sick.
- The government closed down investigations into alleged war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan before a single soldier was prosecuted. Has there been a cover-up at the highest levels of the British military?
- In keeping with Barack Obama's presidential campaign promise, the US withdrew the last of its combat troops from Iraq in December 2011. ln the first of a two-part series, Fault Lines travels across Iraq to take the pulse of a country and its people after nine years of foreign occupation and nation-building. Now that US troops have left, how are Iraqis overcoming the legacy of violence and toxic remains of the US-led occupation, and the sectarian war it ignited? Is the country on the brink of irreparable fragmentation? Can the ghosts of the past ever stop haunting the future? Correspondent Sebastian Walker first went to Baghdad in June 2003 and spent the next several years reporting unembedded from Iraq. In part 1, he returns and travels from Basra to Baghdad to find out what kind of future Iraqis are forging for themselves.